Write Questions based on Images and Boxes

Instructions

In this task, you are asked to write down 10 questions for images. The questions must start with the word which. We will show you six boxes on each image, each containing an object. There are one yellow box and three blue boxes. Each box corresponds to a possible answer to the question (e.g., "Which is the most expensive object on the table?"). Your question must have the yellow box as the correct answer and other blue boxes as the incorrect answers. See the examples below to get some ideas.

Be precise and clear.

Bad Blue boxes must be wrong answers.

The man on the left (in a blue box) is also wearing a shirt.

Bad The yellow box must be the only correct answer.

The yellow box is not the correct answer in this example.

Bad The region itself must answer the actual question.

Pointing to the region doesn't answer the actual question.

Bad The question must point to the object tightly enclosed by the yellow box.

The which object must be tightly enclosed by the yellow box, not the small objects inside the yellow box.

Good The question should be precise and clear.

Good Another good example.

Okay, let's start!

Start a question with the word "Which".


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Tips for approval:

1. Rule of Thumb: An average human with good eyesight should be able to pick the correct region when shown the question and the image.

2. Vague, speculative or unclear questions and typos will be rejected.

3. Don't ask questions regarding the sizes or locations of the boxes with respect to the image. For example, "Which box is in the bottom left corner of the image?" is a very bad question and will be rejected.

4. Avoid asking simple questions about object names (e.g., "Which is a dog?") unless there is no better question to ask (which rarely happens). We love hard questions that require some reasoning.

{% include "simpleamt.html" %}